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  1. Can. 1217 §1. After construction has been completed properly, a new church is to be dedicated or at least blessed as soon as possible; the laws of the sacred liturgy are to be observed. §2. Churches, especially cathedrals and parish churches, are to be dedicated by the solemn rite.

    • Who owns Church property?
    • What is the difference between a parish and a church? People use the expression parish and church interchangeably, but they are very distinct realities.
    • How do parishes merge? Parishes are increasingly having to address the question of whether or not to merge. The declining number of priests to serve the faithful, as well as shifting populations, have caused dioceses throughout the world, especially in Europe and North America, to consider restructuring.
    • What happens with the bank accounts and property in the case of merger? Two canons in the Code of Canon Law oversee the method of merging the juridic person that is a parish.
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  3. Jun 14, 2019 · The Code of Canon Law—which is a book governing much of the celebration of the sacraments and nearly every aspect of the administration of the Church—gives us guidelines for determining how our parishes are named. The relevant canons are 1214-1222. The chosen name of a Church can be: - the name of the Trinity, or.

  4. Jan 17, 2017 · Does the term “particular church” refer to a diocese (or its equivalent, as used in canon law) or to the parish church? That is, can a parish celebrate its patronal feast or memorial as a solemnity? — S.I., Dallas, Texas * * * A: In canon law, the term particular church is generally equivalent to a diocese. To wit:

  5. Canon is another name for a law in the Code of Canon Law. (Adjective form is canonical.) Canon Law is a code of ecclesiastical laws governing the Catholic Church. In the Latin or Western Church, the governing code is the 1983 Code of Canon Law, a revision of the 1917 Code of Canon Law.

  6. Mar 27, 2023 · Canon law deals with all the issues that any legal system does — for example, rights, property issues, procedures, administration, personnel, crimes and trials. It also does some things that civil law cannot, such as laws regarding sacraments, sacred places and magisterial teachings.

  7. Feb 1, 2005 · 1. What is canon law and why is it important? Every organization, whether secular or religious, requires its own laws and customs in order to maintain order. Within the Catholic Church, the internal legal system that governs its day-to-day workings is known as canon law.

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